FC Speranța Crihana Veche

FC Speranța Crihana Veche was a Moldovan football club based in Crihana Veche, Cahul, Moldova. They spent two seasons in the Divizia Națională, the top division of Moldovan football. The club was dissolved in 2014.[1]

FC Speranța Crihana Veche
logo
Full nameFotbal Club Speranța Crihana Veche
Founded19 March 2009 (2009-03-19)
Dissolved2014
GroundStadionul Raionul Atlant
Cahul, Moldova
Capacity1,000
2013–14Divizia Naţională, 11th of 12 (withdrew)

History

In the 2010–2011 season in League team started the season ending position 10 with 34 points to his credit. That season the team had a successful start and later for half the season to lose a bit of ambition Newcomer. The following season, the team showed a more stable development of experienced players coming due and ambitious National Division. Hope fought until the last step for getting first place but finally gave primacy Sheriff Tiraspol 2. The team ended the season with 63 points and has promoted to Division ”A” after receiving national license. Then in 2011–12, FC Speranța Crihana Veche runner-up the "A" Division and promoted to the highest tier of Moldovan football Moldovan National Division.

Honours

Runners-up (1): 2011–12[1]

Managers

List of seasons

Season League Cup Ref
Division Pos Pld W D L GF GA Pts
2008–09 Divizia B (South) 8th 248313385427 [2]
2009–10 Divizia B (South) 3rd 261934622960 [3]
2010–11 Divizia A 10th 289712324534 Second round [4]
2011–12 Divizia A 2nd 302064522366 First round [5]
2012–13 Divizia Națională 11th 334722357019 Round of 16 [6]
2013–14 Divizia Națională 11th 334227209111[lower-alpha 1] Second round [7]
  1. Speranța were deducted 3 points in the 2013–14 season

References

  1. ""Сперанца" Крихана Веке". FootballFacts.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  2. "Moldova 2008/09". RSSSF. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  3. "Moldova 2009/10". RSSSF. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  4. "Moldova 2010/11". RSSSF. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  5. "Moldova 2011/12". RSSSF. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  6. "Moldova 2012/13". RSSSF. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  7. "Moldova 2013/14". RSSSF. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.